The Collaborators
English


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About The Book

Ian Buruma was born in the Netherlands. He studied Chinese at Leiden University and cinema at Nihon University Tokyo. He has lived and worked in Tokyo Hong Kong London and New York. He is a regular contributor to Harper's and The New Yorker and writes monthly columns for Project Syndicate and Bloomberg. He is a professor at Bard College and lives in New York City. <b>'A multiple biography with overlapping chronology is a tricky feat and Buruma pulls it off magnificently.' Ben Macintyre <i>The Times</i></b><br><br>On the face of it the three characters here seem to have little in common - aside from the fact that each committed wartime acts that led some to see them as national heroes and others as villains. All three were mythmakers larger-than-life storytellers for whom the truth was beside the point. <br><br>Felix Kersten was a plump Finnish pleasure-seeker who became Heinrich Himmler's indispensable personal masseur - Himmler calling him his 'magic Buddha'. Kersten presented himself after the war as a resistance hero who convinced Himmler to save countless people from mass murder. Kawashima Yoshiko a gender fluid Manchu princess spied for the Japanese secret police in China and was mythologized by the Japanese as a heroic combination of Mata Hari and Joan of Arc. Friedrich Weinreb was a Hasidic Jew in Holland who took large amounts of money from fellow Jews in an imaginary scheme to save them from deportation while in fact betraying some of them to the German secret police. Sentenced after the war as a traitor and a con artist he is still regarded by supporters as the 'Dutch Dreyfus'.<br><br> All three figures have been vilified and mythologized out of a never-ending need Ian Buruma argues to see history and particularly war and above all World War II as a neat tale of angels and devils. In telling their often-self-invented stories <i>The Collaborators</i> offers a fascinating reconstruction of what in fact we can know about these fantasists and what will always remain out of reach. It is also an examination of the power and credibility of history: truth is always a relative concept but perhaps especially so in times of political turmoil not unlike our own. <b>In this spellbinding account of three World War Two collaborators prize-winning historian Ian Buruma examines questions of truth as he investigates their complex and tangled lives.</b> <b>A fascinating book sometimes disturbing sometimes entertaining never dull.</b> A multiple biography with overlapping chronology is a tricky feat and Buruma pulls it off <b>magnificently</b> maintaining the distinct dramas filleting fact from fiction<b> </b>with <b>sympathy and balance</b> but maintaining the overarching psychological narrative. He <b>never misses a mordant aside or a telling detail... Superb.</b> <b>Fascinating... Buruma's powerful book is also a warning for our own times.</b> <b>Richly enjoyable vital and astute</b> <b>Fascinating</b> <b>Buruma's intriguing narrative reads like a spy thriller.</b> In his subtle <b>carefully constructed</b> book Ian Buruma weaves their stories into an <b>unsettling tapestry.</b> <i>The Collaborators</i> is at once fascinating and frightening an apposite tract for our increasingly mendacious treacherous times. The accounts Ian Buruma gives of the lives and dark doings of three egregious collaborators starkly illustrate our depthless capacity for betrayal and subsequent self-justification; they are also fascinating life studies. It would be shocking to be entertained by such a book but I was. With impressive skill and meticulous research Buruma has woven three very different wartime characters into a fascinating tale of alternative realities riven by mythomania perfidy and collusion. Compulsively readable as always Buruma has taken a riveting subject - collaboration - and delved deep into it probing concepts of national identity self-reinvention loyalty and treason. These unforgettable true stories from terrible days show ruthless survivors using all the tricks of stage farce - storytelling double-crossing cross-dressing - to avoid the firing squads or the gas chambers. The human comedy has never been so bleak - or so human. Mythmakers duplicitous self-aggrandizers and deluders star in these three wartime narratives of both East and West. Ian Buruma weaves their stories together with great skill and panache all the while challenging history and our own time's elision of wish and truth. We are slowly coming to an understanding that the Second World War is a more twisted tale than our black-and-white stories about heroes made us believe. The evil guys remain evil but what about the good ones? Time allows us a more nuanced look and <i>The Collaborators</i> does a formidable job at navigating the muddy waters of an epic battle that was a challenge to each person going through it - a challenge that truly makes for an interesting history. At a time when manifold forms of authoritarianism are on the rise this book could not be more welcome and necessary. By masterfully exploring the complicity guilt and ambivalence pervading three parallel lives in imperial Japan Nazi Germany and occupied Holland Buruma conjures up and richly evokes a thick web of history allowing contemporary readers to understand how easy it is to condone systematic violence and untold suffering in the name of misguided ideals. Buruma sifts through his subjects' complex multinational backgrounds in fluid prose and brings a welcome measure of sympathy to their lives without minimizing the repercussions of their actions. It's <b>a captivating portrait of what happens when survival turns into self-deception.</b> Meticulously relentlessly Buruma dissects these collaborators' contradictory and self-serving accounts and cross-references with other sources to get closer to the truth. <b>A powerful exploration of complicity ambivalence and the human capacity for deception and self-rationalization.</b> <b>A fascinating book sometimes disturbing sometimes entertaining never dull.</b> A multiple biography with overlapping chronology is a tricky feat and Buruma pulls it off <b>magnificently</b> maintaining the distinct dramas filleting fact from fiction<b> </b>with <b>sympathy and balance</b> but maintaining the overarching psychological narrative. He <b>never misses a mordant aside or a telling detail... Superb.</b> <b>Fascinating... Buruma's powerful book is also a warning for our own times.</b> <b>Richly enjoyable vital and astute</b> <b>Fascinating</b> <b>Buruma's intriguing narrative reads like a spy thriller.</b> In his subtle <b>carefully constructed</b> book Ian Buruma weaves their stories into an <b>unsettling tapestry.</b> <i>The Collaborators</i> is at once fascinating and frightening an apposite tract for our increasingly mendacious treacherous times. The accounts Ian Buruma gives of the lives and dark doings of three egregious collaborators starkly illustrate our depthless capacity for betrayal and subsequent self-justification; they are also fascinating life studies. It would be shocking to be entertained by such a book but I was. With impressive skill and meticulous research Buruma has woven three very different wartime characters into a fascinating tale of alternative realities riven by mythomania perfidy and collusion. Compulsively readable as always Buruma has taken a riveting subject - collaboration - and delved deep into it probing concepts of national identity self-reinvention loyalty and treason. These unforgettable true stories from terrible days show ruthless survivors using all the tricks of stage farce - storytelling double-crossing cross-dressing - to avoid the firing squads or the gas chambers. The human comedy has never been so bleak - or so human. Mythmakers duplicitous self-aggrandizers and deluders star in these three wartime narratives of both East and West. Ian Buruma weaves their stories together with great skill and panache all the while challenging history and our own time's elision of wish and truth. We are slowly coming to an understanding that the Second World War is a more twisted tale than our black-and-white stories about heroes made us believe. The evil guys remain evil but what about the good ones? Time allows us a more nuanced look and <i>The Collaborators</i> does a formidable job at navigating the muddy waters of an epic battle that was a challenge to each person going through it - a challenge that truly makes for an interesting history. At a time when manifold forms of authoritarianism are on the rise this book could not be more welcome and necessary. By masterfully exploring the complicity guilt and ambivalence pervading three parallel lives in imperial Japan Nazi Germany and occupied Holland Buruma conjures up and richly evokes a thick web of history allowing contemporary readers to understand how easy it is to condone systematic violence and untold suffering in the name of misguided ideals. Buruma sifts through his subjects' complex multinational backgrounds in fluid prose and brings a welcome measure of sympathy to their lives without minimizing the repercussions of their actions. It's <b>a captivating portrait of what happens when survival turns into self-deception.</b> Meticulously relentlessly Buruma dissects these collaborators' contradictory and self-serving accounts and cross-references with other sources to get closer to the truth. <b>A powerful exploration of complicity ambivalence and the human capacity for deception and self-rationalization.</b>
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